Your liberal nuance is wrong again. It didnt really take reading between the lines to figure this one out. A first day law student could have gotten it right.
Quote
No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States
Indeed, but that would put them a day ahead of you.

The first day law student would know that the case was decided on the due process clause, not the pivileges and immunities clause. That particular clause has sadly been a dead letter since the Slaughter-House Cases of 1873. Here the Court ruled that the privileges and immunities clause did not restrict the police powers of the state. Conservative justices including especially Scalia have defended this decision fiercely as they see it as a bastion of states rights and a way to avoid substantive, rather than just procedural, due process claims. Its a crock IMHO, but thats their claim. If you want me to give you the lecture for day two, I'll be happy to.

FQ13 who is going straight to hell for that post,. Sorry Eric, but you did walk into it.
PS Here's Alitos dismissal of the Privileges and Immunities clause from the Hot Air piece you posted. (nice post BTW, thanks).
Petitioners argue that that the Second Amendment right is one of the “privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States.”There is no need to reconsider the Court’s interpretation of the Privileges or Immunities Clause in the Slaughter-House Cases because, for many decades, the Court has analyzed the question whether particular rights are protected against state infringement under the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause. Pp. 10–11.